September 6th
My dear niece,
I have just received your letter and must admit to being
surprised by your request. Don't think me angry, though, because
I only mean that I had not imagined such inquiries to be
necessary on your side. Your uncle is as much surprised as I am,
and nothing but the belief of your involvement in the affair
would have allowed him to act as he has done. But if you really
know nothing of the matter, I must give you an explanation.
On the same day as my return from Longbourn, your uncle
had a most unexpected visit from Mr Darcy, who talked with
him in private for several hours. He came to tell Mr Gardiner
that he had found out where your sister and Mr Wickham were,
and that he had talked to them. From what I can understand, he
left Derbyshire only one day after ourselves, and came to town
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with the intention of hunting for them. He generously gave as a
reason for this that he felt himself responsible for the whole
situation, because he had not made public in Meryton last year
his knowledge of Wickham's worthlessness. He blamed his own
pride for this.
It seems that there is a lady who was formerly a private
teacher to Miss Darcy and who was dismissed for some good
reason that he did not mention. She had then rented a house in
London and supported herself by letting rooms. Knowing that
she had been friendly with Mr Wickham, Darcy went to her, and
succeeded with some difficulty in getting his address. He first
tried to persuade Lydia to leave her shameful situation and return
to her friends, but he found her determined to remain where she
was. She was sure that Wickham would marry her sometime or
other, and it did not much matter when. The gentleman himself,
it appeared, had no such intention. He still hoped to make his
fortune by a good marriage in some other place. But an
agreement was at last reached which was satisfactory to both
sides.
Our visitor, Darcy, refused every attempt by Mr Gardiner to
share these responsibilities. Nothing was done that he did not do
himself, though I am sure that your uncle would most willingly
have settled the whole matter. They argued over it together for a
long time, but at last your uncle was forced to agree. Wickham's
debts will be paid, another thousand pounds will be settled on
her, and a good position in the army will be obtained for him.
There may be some truth in the reasons given by Mr Darcy
for acting so generously, but in spite of all this fine talk, my dear
Lizzy, you may be sure that your uncle would never have agreed
if we had not believed him to have another interest in the affair.
Will you be very angry if I take this opportunity of saying how
much I like him? His behaviour, his understanding and opinions
all please me, and he only lacks a little liveliness, and that, if he
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marries the right person, his wife may teach him. I thought him
very secretive. He hardly ever mentioned your name. But secrecy
seems to be the fashion. Please forgive me if I have said too
much, or at least do not punish me so far as to forbid me to visit
you at P.
But I must write no more. The children have been wanting
me for the last half-hour.
Your loving aunt,
M. GARDINER.
The information in this letter unsettled Elizabeths spirits.
Darcy had done all this for a woman whom he must scorn and
the man whom he most wished to avoid! Her heart did whisper
that he had done it for her. Oh, how sorry she was for every
unkind feeling that she had ever encouraged towards him! For
herself, she felt ashamed and small, but she was proud of him -
proud that in a cause of honour he could defeat his own nature.
She read over her aunt's praise of him again and again. It was
hardly enough, but it pleased her.
Chapter 25 Return to Netherfield
The day soon arrived when the young pair had to leave, and Mrs
Bennet was forced to bear the separation.
'Write to me often, my dear Lydia,' she cried.
'As often as I can, but married women never have much time
for writing. My sisters may write to me. They will have nothing
else to do.'
Mr Wickham's goodbyes were much warmer than his wife's.
He smiled a lot and said many pretty things.
As soon as he was out of the house, Mr Bennet said bitterly:
'He is as fine a young man as ever I saw. He smiles sweetly, and
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makes love to us all. I am extremely proud of him. Even Sir
William Lucas could not produce a better husband for his
daughter.'
The loss of Lydia made Mrs Bennet very dull for several days,
but her spiritless condition was relieved soon afterwards by a
piece of news which then began to be passed round. The
housekeeper at Netherfield had received orders to prepare for the
arrival of her master. Mrs Bennet was quite unsettled. She looked
at Jane, and smiled and shook her head.
Jane had not been able to hear of his arrival without trembling
a little, and Elizabeth could easily see that it had had an effect on
her spirits. Elizabeth herself was confused by the visit. Had he
come with his friend's permission, or was he brave enough to act
without it?
'I am beginning to be sorry that he is coming at all,' said Jane
to Elizabeth a few days later. 'It would be nothing, I could see
him with complete lack of interest, but I can hardly bear to hear
it continually talked about. My mother means well, but she does
not know how I suffer from what she says.'
Mr Bingley arrived. On the third morning after his coming,
Mrs Bennet saw him from her dressing-room window as he rode
towards the house.
Her daughters were eagerly called on to share her joy. Jane
firmly stayed at her place at the table, but Elizabeth, to satisfy her
mother, went to the window.
She looked, saw Mr Darcy with him, and sat down again by
her sister.
'There is a gentleman with Mr Bingley, Mama,' said Kitty. 'It
looks like that tall, proud man, who used to be with him before -
I've forgotten his name.'
'Oh, heavens! Mr Darcy! Well, I must say that I hate the sight
of him.'
Both Elizabeth and Jane were uncomfortable, but the former
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had a cause for discomfort which could not be guessed by Jane,
to whom she had never yet had the courage to show Mrs
Gardiner's letter, or to tell of her own change of feeling. Her
astonishment at his coming and wishing to see her again was
almost as great as she had experienced when she had first
observed his changed behaviour in Derbyshire. Her face, which
had become pale for half a minute, now found its colour again
with an additional warmth, and a smile of pleasure added
brightness to her eyes, as she thought that his love and wishes
must still be unchanged — but she could not be sure.
She sat busily at work, trying not to appear excited. Jane
looked a little paler than usual. When the gentlemen appeared,
she received them fairly calmly. Elizabeth said as little as
politeness would allow, and sat again at her work. She had dared
to take only one look at Darcy He looked serious as usual.
Bingley, she saw, was both pleased and confused. He was
received by Mrs Bennet with an amount of attention which
made her two oldest daughters feel ashamed, especially when it
was compared with the cold and ceremonious politeness of her
behaviour to his friend. Elizabeth especially, who knew what her
mother owed to Mr Darcy.
Darcy said hardly anything to her. He was not seated by her, so
perhaps that was the reason for his silence. When sometimes,
unable to prevent it, she raised her eyes to his face, she found him
looking at Jane quite as often as at herself. She was disappointed,
and angry with herself for being so.
At this time Mrs Bennet was talking to Bingley happily about
Lydia's marriage, and receiving his congratulations.
'It is a satisfying thing, to be sure, to have a daughter married,'
Mrs Bennet continued, 'but at the same time it is very hard to
have her taken away from me. Her husband has been moved to
another regiment, you know. Thank heavens he has some friends,
though not, perhaps, as many as he deserves.'
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Elizabeth, who knew that this was directed against Mr Darcy,
thought that she could now feel no greater shame. But her
discomfort soon received relief from seeing how much the
beauty of her sister was bringing back the admiration of her
former lover, who seemed to be giving her more and more of his
attention.
When the gentlemen rose to go, they were invited to eat at
Longbourn in a few days' time.
•
As soon as they had gone, Elizabeth walked in the garden to
recover her spirits. Mr Darcy's behaviour astonished and confused
her. She could explain it in no way that gave her pleasure.
'Why did he come at all, if it was only to be silent and
serious? If he fears me, why come here? If he no longer cares for
me, why be silent? Annoying man! I will think no more about
him.'
Her sister approached, and joined her with a cheerful smile.
'Now,' she said, 'that this first meeting is over, I feel perfectly
relaxed. I am glad that he will eat here on Tuesday. It will then be
publicly seen that we meet only as ordinary and uninterested
acquaintances.'
'Very uninterested!' said Elizabeth laughingly. 'I think that you
are in very great danger of making him as much in love with
you as ever.'
They did not see the gentlemen again until Tuesday, when
there was a large party at Longbourn. As the two men entered
the dining room, Elizabeth eagerly watched to see whether
Bingley would take the place which, at all their former parties,
had belonged to him, by her sister. Her careful mother, having
the same idea, did not invite him to sit by herself. He seemed to
pause, but Jane looked round and smiled. It was decided. He
placed himself beside her.
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Elizabeth, with a feeling of victory, looked towards his friend.
He bore it well, and she would have imagined that Bingley had
received his permission to be happy, if she had not seen his eyes
turned towards Mr Darcy with an expression of anxiety.
His behaviour towards her sister during dinner showed such
admiration that Elizabeth believed that, if left completely to
himself, Jane's happiness, and his own, would be speedily gained.
Mr Darcy was on one side of her mother. She knew how little
such a situation could give pleasure to either. She was not near
enough to hear any of their conversation, but she could see how
rarely they spoke to each other, and how formal and cold their
manner was whenever they did.
She hoped that the evening would provide some opportunity
of bringing herself and Mr Darcy together. Anxious and
uncomfortable, the period which passed in the sitting room
before the gentlemen came in was tiring and dull.
The gentlemen came, and she thought that he looked as if he
would have answered her hopes, but oh! the ladies had crowded
so closely round the table, where Jane was making tea and
Elizabeth pouring out the coffee, that there was not a single space
near her where a chair could be placed. He walked away to
another part of the room.
She was a little cheered, though, by his bringing back his
coffee cup himself, and she seized the opportunity to inquire
after his sister. He replied, and then stood beside her for some
minutes in silence.
When the tea things had been removed, and the card tables
placed, they were seated far from each other, at different games,
and she lost every expectation of pleasure. Mrs Bennet was in
high spirits when the guests had gone.
'Well, girls,' she said, as soon as they were left to themselves, 'I
think everything passed off uncommonly well. The dinner was as
well cooked as any I ever saw. The meat was cooked to
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perfection. The soup was 50 times better than that we had at the
Lucases' last week. And, my dear Jane, what do you think Mrs
Long said? "Ah, Mrs Bennet, we shall have her at Netherfield at
last!" I do think that Mrs Long is as good a woman as ever lived -
and her nieces are very well-behaved girls, and not at all good-
looking. I like them very much.'
•
A few days later, Mr Bingley called again, and alone. His friend
had left that morning for London, but would return in ten days'
time. He sat with them for over an hour, and was in noticeably
good spirits. Mrs Bennet invited him to dinner with them, but
unfortunately he had another engagement. He eagerly accepted
an invitation, though, for the following day.
He came, and so early that none of the ladies was dressed. Mrs
Bennet ran into her daughter's room with her hair half-finished,
crying out:
'My dear Jane, hurry down. He has come. Hurry, hurry.'
'We shall be down as soon as we can,' said Jane, 'but I dare say
that Kitty will be ready before either of us.'
'Oh, never mind about Kitty! What has she to do with it?
Come, be quick!'
The same anxiety to get Jane and Mr Bingley by themselves
was plain again in the evening. After tea, Mr Bennet went to the
library, as was his custom, and Mary went upstairs to her piano.
Two of the five being removed, Mrs Bennet sat making signals
with her eyes at Elizabeth and Kitty for some time, without
having any effect on them. Elizabeth did not take any notice, and
when at last Kitty did, she said in surprise, 'What is the matter,
Mother? Is something wrong? What should I do?'
'Nothing, child, nothing.'
Five minutes later, she suddenly got up, and saying to Kitty,
'Come here, my love, I want to speak to you,' took her out of the
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room. A look from Jane begged Elizabeth to remain, but when,
some moments later, the door half opened and her mother called
out that she wanted her, she was forced to go.
Her mother announced her intention of sitting upstairs, and as
soon as she was out of sight, Elizabeth returned to the sitting
room.
Bingley was everything a gentleman should be for the rest of
the evening. He bore all Mrs Bennet's silly remarks with the
greatest patience. After this day, Jane said no more about being
uninterested. Elizabeth believed that all must speedily be brought
to a successful ending, unless Mr Darcy returned too soon. She
felt, though, that all this must be happening with that gentleman's
approval.
Bingley spent the next morning shooting with Mr Bennet,
and returned with him to dinner. After the meal Elizabeth had a
letter to write and, believing that the others were all going to sit
down together to cards, she went to her own room.
But on returning to the sitting room, she found that her
mother had again been arranging matters. Her sister and Bingley
were standing together by the fireplace as if in serious
conversation, and the faces of both, as they quickly turned and
moved away from each other, told everything. Not a word was
said by either, and Elizabeth in her confusion was just going away
again, when Bingley suddenly whispered a few words to her
sister, and ran out of the room.
Jane could have no secrets from Elizabeth, and immediately
admitted that she was the happiest being in the world. Elizabeth's
congratulations were given with sincerity and pleasure. Jane then
ran to her mother.
In a few minutes Elizabeth was joined by Mr Bingley, whose
conversation with Mr Bennet had been short and successful. He
claimed her good wishes and love as a sister, and they shook
hands with great pleasure.
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It was an evening of excitement for them all. Jane's happiness
made her look more beautiful than ever. Kitty smiled, and hoped
that her turn was coming soon. Mrs Bennet could not express
her feelings often enough, and when Mr Bennet joined them at
supper, his voice and manner plainly showed how happy he was.
Not a word passed his lips about it until his visitor had gone.
He then turned to his daughter and said:
Jane, I congratulate you. You will be a very happy woman.'
Jane went to him, kissed him, and thanked him for his
goodness.
'You are a good girl,' he replied,'and I have no doubt that you
will suit each other. You are each so ready to give way to the
other that nothing will ever be decided on; so trusting that every
servant will cheat you, and so generous that you will always
spend more than your income.'
'Spend more than their income!' cried his wife. 'My dear Mr
Bennet, what are you talking of? He has four or five thousand
pounds a year, and very likely more.' Then, addressing her
daughter,'Oh, my dear, dear Jane, I am so happy! I am sure that I
shall not get a moment's sleep tonight. I knew that you could not
be so beautiful for nothing. Oh, he is the best-looking young
man that ever was seen!'
Wickham, Lydia, were all forgotten. Jane was at that moment
her favourite child, and she cared for no other.
Bingley, from this time, was of course a daily visitor at
Longbourn. The situation could not remain a secret for long. Mrs
Bennet whispered it to Mrs Philips, who passed on the news
without permission to all her neighbours. The Bennets were
spoken of as the luckiest family in the world, though only a few
weeks before, when Lydia had run away, they had been generally
believed to be the most unfortunate.
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